Joints.
Last updated Wednesday, January 19, 2005
Figure 1 - Tissues of a joint Figure 2 - Normal joint versus inflamed joint Joint inflammationMotion and function of joints Human bones join with each other in a variety of ways to serve the
functional requirements of the musculoskeletal system. Foremost among
these needs is that of purposeful motion. The activities of the human
body depend on effective interaction between normal joints and the
neuromuscular units that drive them. The same elements also interact
reflexively to distribute mechanical stresses among the tissues of the
joint. Muscles, tendons, ligaments, cartilage, and bone all do their
share to ensure smooth function (see figure 1). In this role, the
supporting elements both unite the abutting bones and position the
joints in the optimal relationship for low-friction load-bearing. Two
important characteristics of normal joint function are stability and
lubrication.Cartilage The cartilage covering our joint surfaces is called "articular
cartilage." Normally, it is a smooth, well-lubricated surface that
offers less frictional resistance than that of an ice skate gliding on
ice.
Normal cartilage is very durable and somewhat elastic providing a
shock absorber for our joints. Articular cartilage does not have a
blood supply. Rather, it gets it oxygen and nutrients from the
surrounding joint fluid. When a joint is loaded, the pressure squeezes
fluid, including waste products out of the cartilage and when the
pressure is relieved, the fluid seeps back in together with oxygen and
nutrients. Thus, the health of cartilage depends on it being used.
Unfortunately, once it is injured, cartilage has a limited ability to
repair itself.
Damaged or abnormal cartilage loses it resistance to wear. The two
joint surfaces grate one on the other and shed particles of cartilage
which further contribute to joint surface wear. As the joint mechanics
deteriorate, the rate of wear increases. The process may continue until
most of the joint cartilage is gone. Bone spurs seem to be the body's
attempt to provide more joint surface, however, because these bone
spurs are not covered by normal cartilage, the affect is not helpful.
The wearing of cartilage may produce deformities such as bowed legs or
stiff spines. Loose pieces of bone and cartilage may break off and
cause joints to "lock".
What is inflammation? Many types of arthritis are characterized by inflammation.
Inflammation is a part of the body's healing response, characterized by
swelling, redness and warmth (see figure 2). This response is
stimulated by injury, infection, surgery and allergic reactions.
Normally, this inflammatory response removes unhealthy and foreign
material from the area. It also begins the repair process in which new
blood vessels and tissue-rebuilding cells (fibroblasts) come to the
injury site. The body's immune system can be viewed much like a
demolition company that tears down old buildings so that new ones can
be built. Inflammation in joints In some types of arthritis, such as rheumatoid arthritis,
the body's immune system gets confused and acts as if joint cartilage
doesn't belong there. The signs of joint inflammation are typical
findings.
This is called an autoimmune response. In other words, the
demolition company starts in on an essential building that cannot be
rebuilt. Sometimes the inflammation does not stop until the cartilage
has been removed from the joint. Factors of stability A number of factors interact to confer stability, while permitting
motion in active human joints. First among these is the shape of the
component parts. In the hips, for example, weight bearing drives the
femoral head into a relatively deep socket, the acetabulum. The
articular members are configured and positioned so that normal loading
enhances the closeness of their fit.
Ligaments provide a second major stabilizing influence as they guide
and align normal joints through their range of motion. An excellent
example is the collateral and cruciate ligaments of the knee. These
strong, relatively inelastic structures limit articular motion to
flexion and extension.
Within the axes of motion, however, more flexible constraints are
required. This need is met by muscles and tendons. Muscular
stabilization is perhaps most obvious in the shoulder, which is the
quintessential polyaxial joint. The rotator cuff muscles approximate
and stabilize the articular surfaces of the shoulder as larger muscles
with better leverage provide the power for effective shoulder motion.
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Synovial fluid Synovial fluid contributes significant stabilizing effects as an
adhesive seal that freely permits sliding motion between cartilaginous
surfaces while effectively resisting distracting forces. This property
is most easily demonstrated in small articulations such as the
metacarpophalangeal joints. The common phenomenon of "knuckle cracking"
reflects the fracture of this adhesive bond. Secondary cavitation
within the joint space causes a radiologically obvious bubble of gas
that requires up to 30 minutes to dissolve before the bond can be
reestablished and the joint can be "cracked" again. This adhesive
property depends on the normally thin film of synovial fluid between
all intraarticular structures. When this film enlarges as a pathologic
effusion, the stabilizing properties are lost.
In normal human joints, a thin film of synovial fluid covers the surfaces of synovium and cartilage within the joint space.
The volume of this fluid increases when disease is present to provide
an effusion that is clinically apparent and may be easily aspirated for
study. For this reason, most knowledge of human synovial fluid comes
from patients with joint disease. Because of the clinical frequency,
volume, and accessibility of knee effusions, our knowledge is largely
limited to findings in that joint.
In the synovium, as in all tissues, essential nutrients are
delivered and metabolic by-products are cleared by the bloodstream
perfusing the local vasculature. Synovial microvessels contain
fenestrations that facilitate diffusion-based exchange between plasma
and the surrounding interstitium. Free diffusion provides full
equilibration of small solutes between plasma and the immediate
interstitial space. Further diffusion extends this equilibration
process to include all other intracapsular spaces including the
synovial fluid and the interstitial fluid of cartilage. Synovial plasma
flow and the narrow diffusion path between synovial lining cells
provide the principal limitations on exchange rates between plasma and
synovial fluid.
This process is clinically relevant to the transport of therapeutic
agents in inflamed synovial joints. Many investigators have made serial
observations of drug concentrations in plasma and synovial fluid after
oral or intravenous administration. Predictably, plasma levels exceed
those in synovial fluid during the early phases of absorption and
distribution. This gradient reverses during the subsequent period of
elimination when intrasynovial levels exceed those of plasma. These
patterns reflect passive diffusion alone, and no therapeutic agent is
known to be transported into or selectively retained within the joint
space.
Metabolic evidence of ischemia provides a second instance when the
delivery and removal of small solutes becomes clinically relevant. In
normal joints and in most pathologic effusions, essentially full
equilibration exists between plasma and synovial fluid. The gradients
that drive net delivery of nutrients (glucose and oxygen) or removal of
wastes (lactate and carbon dioxide) are too small to be detected. In
some cases, however, the synovial microvascular supply is unable to
meet local metabolic demand, and significant gradients develop. In
these joints, the synovial fluid reveals a low oxygen pressure (PO2),
low glucose, low pH, high lactate, and high carbon dioxide pressure
(PCO2). Such fluids are found regularly in septic arthritis, often in
rheumatoid disease, and infrequently in other kinds of synovitis. Such
findings presumably reflect both the increased metabolic demand of
hyperplastic tissue and impaired microvascular supply.
Consistent with this interpretation is the finding that ischemic
rheumatoid joints are colder than joints containing synovial fluid in
full equilibration with plasma. Like other peripheral tissues, joints
normally have temperatures lower than that of the body's core. The
knee, for instance, has a normal intraarticular temperature of 32?C.
With acute local inflammation, articular blood flow increases and the
temperature approaches 37?C. As rheumatoid synovitis persists, however,
microcirculatory compromise may cause the temperature to fall as the
tissues become ischemic.
The clinical implications of local ischemia remain under
investigation. Decreased synovial fluid pH, for instance, was found to
correlate strongly with radiographic evidence of joint damage in
rheumatoid knees. Other work has shown that either joint flexion or
quadriceps contraction may increase intrasynovial pressure and thereby
exert a tamponade effect on the synovial vasculature. This finding
suggests that normal use of swollen joints may create a cycle of
ischemia and reperfusion that leads to tissue damage by toxic oxygen
radicals.
Normal articular cartilage has no microvascular supply of its own
and, therefore, is at risk in ischemic joints. In this tissue, the
normal process of diffusion is supplemented by the convection induced
by cyclic compression and release during joint usage. In immature
joints, the same pumping process promotes exchange of small molecules
with the interstitial fluid of underlying trabecular bone. In adults,
however, this potential route of supply is considered unlikely, and all
exchange of solutes may occur through synovial fluid. This means that
normal chondrocytes are farther from their supporting microvasculature
than are any other cells in the body. The vulnerability of this
extended supply line is clearly shown in synovial ischemia.
The normal proteins of plasma also enter synovial fluid by passive
diffusion. In contrast to small molecules, however, protein
concentrations remain substantially less in synovial fluid than in
plasma. In aspirates from normal knees, the total protein was only 1.3
g/dL, a value roughly 20% of that in normal plasma. Moreover, the
distribution of intrasynovial proteins differs from that found in
plasma. Large proteins such as IgM and cr2-macroglobulin are
underrepresented, whereas smaller proteins are present in relatively
higher concentrations. The mechanism determining this pattern is
reasonably well understood. The microvascular endothelium provides the
major barrier limiting the escape of plasma proteins into the
surrounding synovial interstitium. The protein path across the
endothelium is not yet clear; conflicting experimental evidence
supports the fenestrae, intercellular junctions, and cytoplasmic
vesicles as the predominant sites of plasma protein escape. What does
seem clear is that the process follows diffusion kinetics. This means
that smaller proteins, which have fast diffusion coefficients, will
enter the joint space at rates proportionately faster than those of
large proteins with relatively slow diffusion coefficients.
In contrast, proteins leave synovial fluid through Iymphatic
vessels, a process that is not size-selective. Protein clearance may
vary with joint disease. In particular, joints affected by rheumatoid
arthritis (RA) experience significantly more rapid removal of proteins
than do those of patients with osteoarthritis. Thus, in all joints,
there is a continuing, passive transport of plasma proteins involving
synovial delivery in the microvasculature, diffusion across the
endothelium, and ultimate Iymphatic return to plasma.
The intrasynovial concentration of any protein represents the net
contributions of plasma concentration, synovial blood flow,
microvascular permeability, and Iymphatic removal. Specific proteins
may be produced or consumed within the joint space. Thus, lubricin is
normally synthesized within synovial cells and released into synovial
fluid where it facilitates boundary layer lubrication of the
cartilage-on-cartilage bearing. In disease, additional proteins may be
synthesized, such as IgG rheumatoid factor in RA, or released by
inflammatory cells, such as Iysosomal enzymes. In contrast,
intraarticular proteins may be depleted by local consumption, as are
complement components in rheumatoid disease.
Synovial fluid protein concentrations vary little between highly
inflamed rheumatoid joints and modestly involved osteoarthritic
articulations. Microvascular permeability to protein, however, is more
than twice as great in RA as in osteoarthritis. This marked difference
in permeability leads to only a minimal increase in protein
concentration, because the enhanced ingress of proteins is largely
offset by a comparable rise in Iymphatic egress. These findings
illustrate that synovial microvascular permeability cannot be evaluated
from protein concentrations unless the kinetics of delivery or removal
are concurrently assessed. Intraarticular pressure Intraarticular pressure is about -4 mmHg in the resting, normal knee,
and this pressure falls farther when the quadriceps muscle contracts.
The difference between atmospheric pressure on overlying tissues and
subatmospheric values within the joint helps to hold the joint members
together and thus provides a stabilizing force. In a pathologic
effusion, however, the resting pressure is above that of the atmosphere
and it rises farther when surrounding muscles contract. Thus, reversal
of the normal pressure gradient is an additional destabilizing factor
in joints with effusions.How are joints lubricated? Synovial joints act as mechanical bearings that facilitate the work
of the musculoskeletal machine. As such, normal joints are remarkably
effective with coefficients of friction lower than those obtainable
with manufactured journal bearings. Furthermore, the constant process
of renewal and restoration ensures that living articular tissues have a
durability far superior to that of any artificial bearing. No
artificial joint can equal the performance of a normal human joint.
The mechanics of joint lubrication have provided a focus of
investigation beginning with the unique structure of the bearing
surface. Articular cartilage is elastic, fluid-filled, and backed by a
relatively impervious layer of calcified cartilage and bone. This means
that load-induced compression of cartilage will force interstitial
fluid to flow laterally within the tissue and to surface through
adjacent cartilage. As that area, in turn, becomes load bearing, it is
partially protected by the newly expressed fluid above it. This is a
special form of hydrodynamic lubrication, so-called because the dynamic
motion of the bearing areas produces an aqueous layer that separates
and protects the contact points.
Boundary layer lubrication is the second major low-friction
characteristic of normal joints. Here, the critical factor is proposed
to be a small glycoprotein called lubricin. The lubricating properties
of this synovium-derived molecule are highly specific and depend on its
ability to bind to articular cartilage where it retains a protective
layer of water molecules. Lubricin is not effective in artificial
systems and thus does not lubricate artificial joints.
Other lubricating mechanisms have been proposed; some remain under
investigation. Interestingly, hyaluronic acid, the molecule that makes
synovial fluid viscous (synovia means "like egg white"), has largely
been excluded as a lubricant of the cartilage-on-cartilage bearing.
Instead, hyaluronate lubricates a quite different site of surface
contact-that of synovium on cartilage. The well-vascularized,
well-innervated synovium must alternately contract and then expand to
cover non-loaded cartilage surfaces as each joint moves through its
normal range of motion. This process must proceed freely. Were synovial
tissue to be pinched, there would be immediate pain, intraarticular
bleeding, and inevitable functional compromise. The rarity of these
problems testifies to the effectiveness of hyaluronate-mediated
synovial lubrication. Why do joints make popping or cracking noises? Joints can make different noises--some are serious and some are not.
Some people learn how to "pop their knuckles." By pushing or pulling
a joint in a certain way, an air bubble can suddenly appear in the
joint with a "pop." Once the bubble is there the joint cannot be popped
again until the air has been reabsorbed.
Some joints crack as the ligaments and tendons that pass over them
slide past bumps on the bones. Individuals who "crack their neck" make
noise in this way.
Other joints lock up intermittently--often with a loud pop--because
something gets caught in between the joint surfaces. A torn cartilage
in the knee or a loose piece of bone or cartilage in the joint can do
this. Once a joint is stuck in this way, it may need to be wiggled
around to unlock it. This may also cause a pop.
Finally, joints that are arthritic may crack and grind. These noises
usually occur each time the joint is moved. This noise is due to the
roughness of the joint surface due to loss of the smooth cartilage.
Credits Some of this material adapted from a chapter in the "Primer on the
Rheumatic Diseases" originally prepared by Peter A. Simkin, M.D.
Some of this material adapted from information originally prepared for the Arthritis Foundation.
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